But Of The Tree Of The Knowledge

He is home.
The sense of falling, of light-headedness, of darkness in a land of light. The softest of landings this time, maybe last time, but not next time, not with new shapes and new memories. Clutching at a world that no longer exists. The image is vibrant, clear, as if he never left. It's a stage, but where does he start, where does he begin? For anything before now is back story, it does not belong in the play proper, it would break away from traditional structure. But something of the natural world, a pain at the top of the neck, the lower head, an old pain, something felt a few lives ago, especially common, or not especially common, it can be hard to judge these things.
But that's getting ahead of ourselves.
What's it called when a memory looks exactly the same as what you see? A low sun in the sky, quite low for this time of day, above a mouldy green house, or maybe not so green, maybe a light blue, pale with such a powerful back light, and an extra level for ostentation, all covered with a twinkling silver roof. And whose fault is that? His fault? Why are we assigning blame? Who's to say, these days, what is right and wrong? Questions, already so many questions, but he's here for answers, he understands, he does, he really does, let him speak so that you may learn. He is smarter than he seems, oh yes, much smarter than many others you could mention, so just give him time and let him speak.
The wind opens up the world to others in an unsettling way, tearing away the grappling selfishness and forcing itself deeply inside, only to expose the small points, the minor foibles, accentuating tiny questions into volcanoes that almost explode. The scent of fresh cut grass always reminds him of summer. And why wouldn't it? The dry air mixes with lavender and eucalyptus and caries itself along the great expansive redness, touching only his hair, whatever is left of it, and tickling his mind.
He recognises the house despite his world, your world, being filled with replicas, all inexact copies of a flawed master, with just enough similarity to avert unease. That's why it's done this way, yes? Relaxing those who would otherwise revolt is a sure sign of a modern society, not like those barbarians of the past, with their wars of weapons, of sticks and clubs; not when we can placate the anger with fear, by giving them property, by threatening their property, in a subtle way of course, since we are civilised. But his house it is, and also his driveway, since we must be locked into roads, with their set paths and regulations and fines, all controlled, describable, a tapering over of the randomness beneath, a smooth surface so that the explosions of creativity are kept hidden from prying eyes.
No, no, don't interrupt him, he is talking. Do you want him to answer or don't you? He is doing as you ask. If you want to be the one answering questions then perhaps you should switch places with him. But that wouldn't do, would it? You would then see the world through his eyes and you couldn't bear the contradictions that evade your daily perception. He will think lesser of you and maybe even cease the charade. Though reputation from the likes of him may not mean much to you, it should, and you should remember that.
Corrugated fences suggest an uneasiness, a wavering, as if we are meant to question. Or maybe to not question, and instead to accept the structure that crushes us further every day. I don't know why he mentions this. No wait, perhaps I do, for there is a neighbour above the fence, with pruning shears and gardening gloves. Or perhaps she is the manifestation of stereotypes, of foreign motives, to again shield us from truth. Regardless, we should play along, for what he says of this woman may be important. Yes, yes, he will get to it, it is coming, please don't rush. This may be the most important part, who knows?
The neighbour, standing, or kneeling, but over a high fence, or a low fence, focused at once on both the rose bushes and of him as he traipses up the artificial path. But who's to say what's genuine and what is artificial? Everything we make could be said to be natural, as we are natural and real. An image of a rainforest in his mind, the image itself, not the object it represents, seems to claim more rights to being natural than the physical concrete driveway he walks on. It is all a matter of perspective, surely.
So where was he? The neighbour was talking, or perhaps wasn't, but she is now, her screeching inviting tingles down the spine, encouraging dimples to lightly brush skin. “Is that you, dear?” she squawks, the fat on her wings, wrinkled like a turkey's wattle, swinging in delayed movements, always playing catching up, even after rest, which isn't long, not when there's gesticulating to perform, an ever-present desire to communicate without speech. If only she listened to her body and gave the world the gift of silence, but no, not her, not with an ear to chew, not with a life revolving around excursions into more exciting lives, of close neighbours, or perhaps far from the suburbs, in exotic locations, dripping with glitz and celebrity, the heat of attention melting onto footpaths and roads, cavernous underground tunnels funnelling drool to middle-class shanties, protecting the pretty people from exposure, and all without a need for a cover that messes up the hair, the kind they spruik before an audience, the very same people, whose interests pervade our own psyche, whose words we listen to and even take seriously, whose messages we lap up like obedient dogs, and yet who's force-fed verbiage is not quite so banal as that spoken by his neighbour: “You're late today.”
Yes, late, that's what he says. Ah, see, I told you it might be important. You need to listen to him, listen closely, and the truth will emerge. You are like a rescue team in search of a small girl trapped in a hedge maze, trying to cut through the foliage with chainsaws and axes rather than follow the existing path, slow and steady, listening for the clues, finding answers, for you may find your girl but destroy the world in the process. The neighbour's name? Margaret perhaps. Or Gladys. Yes, definitely Gladys. Or at least he thinks so. Does it matter? Will the story hinge on the identity of the neighbour? You're probably barking up the wrong tree to think so, barking mad, chewing at the wrong bone, flopping your ears back when they should be forward, snarling when you should be holding a paw out to shake. OK, fine, let her be Gladys, if it makes your job easier. “Oh, hi Gladys,” he says, sans enthusiasm, clearing his throat, using the name you like, hoping to appease, beholden to propriety due to upbringing, the worst kind of manners, the ones learnt and used simply because, not for reason or respect for others.
No, no, please don't make him try to describe, to realise a physical manifestation of red lipstick and blue eye-liner, to force the clichés to meld into memory, to make him mention hair curlers and coloured dye and gaudy blouses and thick white stockings and high heels or plain flats or no shoes at all and instead green toenails for some reason, a connection to the garden, of gloves and clippers, of a wide-brimmed hat, flowery and loosely connected with speckles of light attacking through the weave, hitting bare scalp where once strong follicles grew and protected skin. You see, it is useless. We all close our eyes to nightmares. Don't presume to cast the first stone. Yes, yes, he's aware of hardened glass, and of other lies, but he is also cognisant of physics and ricochets and how a large stone can make a big dent on an uncovered foot. But wait, perhaps there is something he can describe, and that is his own shoes, neat, clean, polished black, simple but stylish enough that no ghost of a real person, no mist in the shape of man, would attack the integrity of his manhood and ability to generate the one commodity that matters most to the disappearing majority. He clicks his shoes together, perhaps like Dorothy, to escape to the real world, or maybe to bring himself back into the real world, for sensory perception to ground him in life, and to ground him now for much the same reasons, though this time in the present, instead of the reality of the past, unless that wasn't real either. No matter. It all seems so distant regardless.
Why did he engage with Gladys or Mavis or the other name, then, when he must have wanted to avoid her if possible? You are clearly from a different society if you see that as a viable alternative to sneaking in, head down, eyes fixed on the ground ahead, for that only invites more questions, generates more discussion, sends out more pigeons with not so secret messages, a flock of birds flinging mud with disregard to facts. No, engage he must for the alternative is a life of constant cleaning. “How is Abner these days?” he says, “I never see him attending to his garden any more.” But again, these names are not important. Sure, her husband or son or dog could really be called Abner, or not.
The fence – ah yes, it is a fence; perhaps corrugated or white picket or hedge or wire – the fence is complete apart from a persistent and long-lasting hole, poking through the facade as if drawing attention to itself, the absence of substance more important than the substance itself, a kind of inverted white space in a world that craves complexity. He wonders, now, why the hole still exists, given the time that must have passed.
“No,” says Gladys, her voice visiting a distant land, whose past is our present and upon which this Abner must reside, the real Abner, the one in her mind, who she perceives him to be, mixed with how others perceive him, as this is all we truly are, especially when we aren't nearby, when they think of us and talk of us, and have in their minds a picture of us, let alone when we die and they are all we have to exist any more. A stronger, stouter, brazen Gladys adds an addendum, saying, “You could do with his help, too. Look at all your rotten fruit.”
The nerve of the creature, shrilly parroting the demanding and vicious beaks of her past, as if burdened to repeat the same mistakes, again and again, or else lose the ability to judge. However, despite indignation, the apples dangling from the thin, wretched branches are indeed rotten, almost steaming in the warm afternoon sun or the cold evening air, many having found themselves fallen like Man and cast out, blanketing the patchy grass with browns and reds and yellows, ready to continue the circular journey, proving that nature does not thankfully listen to our biases of beauty and desires.
“Quite,” he says, occupying his own distant world, one without emotion or compassion, adding a quick “Must run” while already nearing paradise, passing it, and, with counsel from Egill, landing at the doors of Sessrúmnir.
Chosen? Perhaps he was chosen, it certainly suggests he was, but perhaps he is embellishing now, brave that he is, having withstood your batterings for an eternity, thinking himself a warrior. One can only cower in humility for so long before a fork forces ones hand and leaves two options, neither of which are satisfactory to those who stare and whisper and chide. Oh, but he's getting sidetracked. Let him progress. I'm sure he didn't mean to imply an afterlife when he is here, now, living and breathing, at least for now, just as you are, or perhaps not just as you, with the way you move, the periods between coughs, the languid attention to detail. Sorry, sorry, you are quite correct, it is he who should have the focus, and only he.
Either with a key or without, he opens the large door; that or with brute force, a kick and a push, hard enough to knock the door off its hinges. One of those at any rate, one of those methods and he stands before the darkened hallway, a mist floating in the air, shafts of light pounding against frilled rugs, bouncing onto drab carpet, illuminating from below as much as any direction, a strange upside down world, or perhaps the right way up and he, instead, is upside down, topsy turvy, facing the wrong kind of way, not just the wrong way, about to travel in reverse. Excitement, buzzing, a nervous high, for he is home early, yes, earlier than expected, or maybe later, but not on time, and so his wife would not know, be unaware, be not expecting him, especially not anticipating the surprise he brings home.
A girl, a small one, his child, standing along the corridor, nonchalantly biting an apple, a bright red one, the loud crispness as her teeth crunch through the skin and into the juicy interior, piercing through the bitter Stygian barrier and on to the sweetness beyond, rousing enough innocence to make the youngest feel bitter and cynical, dribbling down a hand, an arm, perilously close to staining the pale blue dress with white frills or the maroon tshirt and blue denim jeans or the pink one-piece bathing suit with flotation devices surrounding her waist and arms. Surely one of those, whichever fits the story better.
Her name, too? Why do you enjoy facts so? They are not as incontrovertible or immutable as you think, yet you rely on them religiously. Emma, then. Her name is Emma. What? Of course it's true. He hasn't lied to you yet. Oh, here we go, concentrating on one word as if it is a gateway, as if the word yet is like the skin of the apple, and piercing it will let you swoosh around inside his mind. It is one of those throw-away things, the kind of which you'd be used to in your culture, where the easiest course of action is often to discard at a moments notice, to quietly creep away and never look back, to end without effort because effort is hard, and we can't have hard things, that's the antithesis of modernity, and why have hard things when we can have easy things? But he sees that these words mean nothing to you, that you are down to business, always focussed on the job at hand, never to enjoy an aside, but by doing so it is clear you will never see the real truth of any event, certainly never get inside another's mind as you put it so pedestrianly, and will become more specialised within a single area in equal proportion to a lack of wisdom in every area.
What have you got there?” he says, head nodding toward the orange in her hand, the one she devours so ravenously. As if we don't feed her! But the smile on a child's face is enough to banish such trivial thoughts, with its message of hope and other inbuilt biological rationale, enough to feel the weight slip off the shoulders and onto a nebulous existence outside of the body. Alas, the smile takes no time to flicker and fall, crashing like waves against a shore, spraying salt water across the grimy walls, against the paintings and windows, even up to the high ceilings, in a kind of cleansing that hurts in the moment but becomes, in hindsight, the beginning of a new life, free of false perceptions and dull memories. Her undulating lips and quivering eyelids a precursor to a game of hide and seek, but who is the one hiding and who is the one closing their eyes? Are they the same? Does the water begin where the land ends, or vice versa? Either she moves from him, or him from her, does it really matter which is which?
The stairs that sit at the end of the corridor create a fork, with one direction heading up and the other to the side, level, on to the kitchen, the sparkling new tiled floors and shiny kitchen tops awaiting the wandering Jew, an easy decision to make, the road more travelled, the safe route. Toward the stairs he steps, waiting at the foot. No. Wait. No. He doesn't go up the stairs. Why does he say this? Why does he lie? He goes to the kitchen, remaining in ignorance, not rising and seeking, simply content to view the familiar. There is no reason to go up the stairs.
He goes to the kitchen to see Alexandra, knowing she would be hard at work, baking or cooking or preparing a meal, for him or someone else, but who else? If he goes to the kitchen, which he does, then it must be me who moves up the stairs. No, please, don't listen to him, he doesn't understand what he's saying. That's why I'm here, to protect him, to make sure he tells you the truth from his perspective, for there are many truths, one no better than another, and his will explain everything, such that you won't need further investigation into incidents or background information from those who know him.
So he went left, to the kitchen, and I the right, up the stairs. Or was it the other way around? One of these, definitely one of these, but always to the kitchen, never upstairs. They creak, the stairs, with the slightest pressure, like a snitch in an interrogation, no offence, the tiniest weight and they speak to the world in squeaks and moans. Up further he travels – I mean me; I travel, for he is downstairs – without emotion for I am devoid of those human traits, clearly, can you not see? Now you are being rude and accusatory for the sake of it. The windows are being washed, sun light shining through, you can see inside if you press your face against the glass and cup your hands, reducing the reflection from the bouncing rays, while avoiding the soapy suds that stream down. So why would he travel up the stairs when he had no need? Answer me that! He had no business up there, not until later – no, not even later, I tell a lie. Yes, it is me lying now, forgive me, I'm nervous, this has all changed, I can feel it, everything so exposed.
At the top of the stairs a door, white, formerly white, dirt and smudges and cobwebs creating a new pattern of strange shapes, a design un-designed, like a mind in free fall, clutching at the pieces of structure that press in from the outside world, struggling to form pathways that aid in rationality or normalcy, if it even exists, a far cry from the methodical processes we value and pretend to see, let alone create. I pat my suit jacket for an emblem of irrationality and then knock on the door. You see! I knock. Why would he need knock on his own door? He wouldn't. It makes no sense. And yet you try to tell me it was he atop the stairs and he that knocked on his own door. Clearly I did these things. And don't try to tell me anything different. He can sense your mouth opening and expects lies to follow, like obedient soldiers with orders from their commanding officer to perform their duties with prejudice, without explaining why they are there or what they hope to accomplish, without even explicating their duties at all, less they question the legality of their orders. Before they make their charge he will continue the story, to not give them the chance, because a story is what it is, to stop your attacks before they happen, whether or not it is true.
Hearing no response at the door, hearing no response at the top of the stairs, hearing no response in his home, he steps back and kicks the door down, or opens it quietly, or knocks again and waits for a response. Why is Alexandra here, in the bedroom, frittering her movements, covering up indecencies, red faced, pattering back toward the window, when she should be down stairs in the kitchen, where he is, where they both are right now? This is not the right story. This is a fabrication. What have you done to him? Have you treated him badly, tortured him so that you hear what you want to hear? Huh? What man? You see, you elude to concepts, imply locations and animals and people, and soon enough they slip into the story, as if they were always there, and a logical basis has to be invented that takes them into account, makes them right, where they become central to everything, like a light sleeper in a vivid dream. He knows your little tricks. This is what you want to hear? Fine, then you will hear it. The man, frazzled black hair, with slightly greying chest hair beneath an unbuttoned shirt, white underwear to match, holds a metal pole menacingly, or timidly, like a frightened mouse whose cheese has just been discovered, if that really happens in real life and is not just a vision from cartoons, from the propaganda infiltrating children's minds about ownership and a kind of grappling selfishness, the capitalistic hegemony shaping a compliant and ideologically ignorant lower-middle-class who will be exuberant and thankful for their squalor, learning of false opportunities, indoctrinated to believe in an impossible dream.
How is your apple crumble?” says Alexandra, in the sparkly clean kitchen, the reflected brightness blinding to invaders, to all those whose natural proclivity excludes domestic chores, but which is invisible or even dull to the household class, who incessantly natter away at the banalities you no doubt find fascinating. Oh come, there's no need to get upset, no need to take offence, it is only a small joke, a tiny broadside across a rather large hull. Ah yes, OK, so that one may have hit home with more vigour, smacked over the head with a cricket bat perhaps, or excreted on by a bird in a tree high above, for that far better represents his position in relation to you, but not in the way you probably interpret, which is your own fault, not his, certainly not his.
Martin? No, she doesn't mention Martin. Not at all. Only when she says “What are you doing here, Martin?”, but that's the only time, certainly, that's all. But the man - yes the man, he's incorporating the man, don't worry – drops the pole and raises his hands, becomes white, just like his clothing, shakes a little, like a tree in the breeze, branches swaying at random intervals, leaves twinkling in front of a bright sun that shoots through the large window, forming moving shapes and patterns on his own suit jacket, on his hand, the one that holds the pistol. It's hard to say where it came from, especially these days, in the age of convenience, where procuring our desires is easier than formulating them, and where substance and truth are nothing compared to being the first to say something, the wrong something, the right something, as long as it is something and it is raised first, then you are the champion, you win the game, you get to celebrate with the other liars you pretend to disagree with and come up with new games, in an us-versus-them scenario that pits you and your enemies against the plebs, who blindly admire self-interest and use financial ladders as a measurement of success.
Enough of your wretched implications, your wily tricks, it is I who hold the pistol, not him, for he is downstairs in the kitchen, eating his apple crumble, enjoying his meal, devouring any thoughts of a bedroom and a woman and a man and a pistol, safe and secure, away from botherers and hypocrites, beholden to none but his own moral compass, in a hideaway that never really existed, neither in his mind or the less real world, that instantiation of corruptness which permeates the consciousness of supposedly living creatures, each carrying out the lie with vigour and determination. How she looks in her white fluffy top or black skirt & stockings or yellow summery floral dress! Alexandra, Alexandra, a name as pure and nice as the being herself, almost, though not quite, for how do you match perfection when all you have in comparison are the inaccuracies of language, hamstrung by imagination itself, betraying the results of the fall, all dirty and unclean, which is of course the same thing and only serves to emphasise my point, whatever it is, or was, or perhaps never will be.
The gun, the gun, the gun, yes, the gun. He must focus or you will play more nasty tricks, I know, I see it now, more implications and hints, like a torturer who knows the answers already. So perhaps he walks over to the man, this other man, a Walter or a Gene or a Robert, pointing the pistol at him, which Walter is aware of, painfully aware of, you can see it in his face, but which doesn't hold his complete attention for he is motioning to something or someone, with a fear in his eyes more concrete than if it were his own life that was flashing before his eyes and hearing the trumpets play, yet in my vision, my blurry myopic view, filled with dark borders and hazy centres, I see Alexandra hiding behind Gene, the softness of her skin and exposure of her body arousing the same sensations I have felt in the past, he felt in the past, a strange smell filling his nostrils, almost making him gag, pheromones spreading throughout the room as if this were an orgy, a disgusting sweat-induced cacophony of emotions filling his mind and body, confusingly obtuse and contradictory, bringing up the past in one violent heave that deposits vomit on the carpet or wooden floor and onto his hands and pistol, which still points at Robert, the enemy, the second enemy, the lesser one, who's gesticulations make me turn and follow a scampering rat who melts into Walter's arms, seeking protection, when it is really he that should be cowering in a corner, that piece of shit, hiding away and praying for his life instead of protecting, performing my role far better than I ever could, except now he'll get what he deserves with the lightest pull of a finger...

The haze is back, or it never really left, and everything is toneless and hue-less, all fading and rising once more like the flicker of an old projector, muffled screams and a heart beating loudly, with a view obscured by society, except for the red, the red on Walter's arms, the red on Walter's hands, the red on Emma's dress, the red on Emma's neck, the red on Emma's face, the red on Emma's chest, the red of her body, the red of the future, the red of danger, the red of passion, the red of love, the red of vitality, especially the red of vitality, in a morbid and sickening way, in a hauntingly poetic way, which is what you wanted to hear, which is why I'm here, and the reason you are taking notes and recording and giving me the breath to speak, before it's too late and there is no chance to do any of those things. But it's OK. Do your worst. For I am not here. I'm at home. In the kitchen. Emma scurries about, full of movement, a little pocket of energy, as Alexandra laughs and feeds me one last slice of her sweet apple crumble.



© 2014 Ben Safta

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Vladimir & Estragon

“Ah, Estragon.”
“Morning Vladimir.”
Estragon continued mopping the metal floor as his colleague shuffled toward him, broom in hand.
“And how has your night been, old one?” said Vladimir.
“Old one he says. Listen to him. As if he's the spring chicken.” Estragon licked his lips. “You're catching up, you know.”
“I'm catching up? And how's that possible dear Estragon, answer me that?”
“Hm?” said Estragon, ear pointed toward his colleague.
“I said, how is that possible?”
“How's what possible?”
“How is it possible that I'm catching up? In age, I mean.”
“Oh, that's easy,” said Estragon. “It's well known that you age faster as you get older. You can't tell me a day today is the same as it was in your youth, old man.”
“Old ma-” Vladimir choked on the phrase. “And that's beside the point, if we aged as we got older, you'd be getting older faster than me. Which would mean, ipso facto, you will always be winning the race.”
“The race? Where are we racing now?” said Estragon.
“The race to the end.”
“What end? Where are we going? Argh, we're always going somewhere.”
“No, not somewhere,” said Vladimir. “The end isn't somewhere. It's more an...idea.” He leant his chin over the long broom handle as he brushed aside the debris of the corridor.
We're headed for an idea?” Estragon removed his bowler hat and, through thick blonde hair, managed to scratch his scalp.
Well, something like that. I forget the details.”
And what is this idea? Can I hear it?”
“I said I forget the details. It doesn't matter.”
It does,” said Estragon. “I'd like to know where we're going.” He mopped one portion of the floor, the wet fibres only managing to give his holy shoes a clean. “Where did you hear this?”
“Oh, I don't know,” said Vladimir, straining his gaunt face. “Everyone's heard it, at one time or another. You've heard it, the-”
I've heard it?” said Estragon. “When did I hear it?”
“When you were younger, perhaps.”
“Younger? You're not too far off me, you know, in the age department. And you're gaining.”
A heavy jolt almost knocked Vladimir off his feet. “And what are they doing now?” he said, steadying himself.
Ah, I'm wondering that myself. They've been at it off and on all night.”
“Who has? The flight crew?”
“Hm?” said Estragon.
“What's been off and on?” said Vladimir, louder. “Are they shooting targets out there?”
Could be, could be. You might be on to something. All I know is that I've barely been able to get a nap in.”
Do you think they know where to aim? That they're not meant to shoot the ship?”
Oh it's all their hair,” said Estragon. “The roots get too long and infect the brain.”
“You're one to talk,” said Vladimir.
Estragon blew the long blonde locks out his eyes. “No, not me, them,” he said. “No offence.”
“And what does that mean?”
Well with the, you know,” said Estragon, his hand wavering a finger toward his colleague's head. “No offence meant.”
Vladimir squashed down his own bowler hat. “Yes, well, I'm getting older you know.”
“I knew it! I told you!”
You told me what?”
“You're getting older. Like I said.”
Well done. You win.”
“Not another race?” said Estragon. “To be honest, I'm a bit too tired for races.”
As he was speaking a din grew in the distance, followed by a swarm of soldiers each with clean and ironed uniforms of blue, stamping their boots with vigour across the clean wet floor.
“Hey, hey, watch it!” said Estragon.
They were already buzzing away when Vladimir let out a half-hearted addendum, saying, “He's only just done that bit.”
“Thanks for your help,” said Estragon.
“What? I called out. I did my bit against the evil imperialists.”
“Oh yes, you showed them.”
“You already did that part of the corridor. I know. I told them. It's all sorted out now.”
“Thank you my brother. What else will you do for me? Feed me grapes in my parlour? Hold me up when I go to the toilet? Clean my shoes?”
“Your shoes get a good cleaning at any rate,” said Vladimir, nodding at the wet tattered fabric.
“Hm?” said Estragon, believing that scrunching his face would improve his hearing.
“What? Hey? Where? When?”
“Oh alright then, make fun of me. You're such a sprightly one. Full of vigour and such. Well done you.”
“Just don't collapse on the floor and make me carry you some place. I don't think my muscles could take it.”
“Oh yes, that's it!”
“That's what?” said Vladimir.
“That's it, that's what.”
“What's it?”
“What I was trying to remember. You interrupted me. The soldiers that went past – they were soldiers, right?”
“I cede to your greater sight,” said Vladimir, adjusting his glasses.
“Ah yes. The soldiers. They shouldn't be running like that. It's a health and safety issue. What would have happened if one of them slipped and fell backwards? Oh I know, they've got a gun, and that makes them important; so important that they couldn't possibly slip on a wet floor and crack their head open.”
“That's the problem. Permanently in a hurry. Did I ever tell you that when I was younger I designed the interior of a colony class ship, and improved the internal transportation methods, cutting down on end-to-end journey time by thirty percent?”
Estragon stopped mopping and stared dully at his colleague. A smile slowly formed as a crease amongst many on his cherub face. “You did not. You didn't design anything.”
“I did! I designed even this one, I think.”
“Designed this one?”
“Or one like it. They're all pretty similar I suppose.”
“You didn't design this one.”
“I did! Read the plaque if you don't believe me.”
“Plaque?” said Estragon. “What plaque?”
“The one on the ship. Don't you always read the plaque?”
“Where is this plaque?”
“Depends on the ship. But it's in lots of places. Depends on the ship, of course.”
“Like where? Somewhere near here?”
“I suppose,” said Vladimir. “Down a corridor is as good a place as any to put a plaque.”
Estragon looked around. “On the wall, do you think? Or somewhere else?”
“On the wall, sure. On the wall. Or somewhere else.”
Estragon mopped his way to the angled metal corridor wall, saying, “About eye level?”
“Eye level. Aye.”
“Hmmm. There's something here.” Estragon scratched at the surface, leaning in with a squint. “This colony class vessel internals designed by Becky Sams.”
“Ah, Becky Sams. A good designer. Good.”
“You know her then? This Becky Sams?”
“Know her? She's a good designer, very good. The ship is in good hands.”
“So you're not Becky Sams?”
“I'm not Beck- Of course I'm not Becky Sams. Do I look like a Becky Sams?”
Estragon raised his hat, leant in, and peered at Vladimir. “No,” he said, at last. “So you didn't design it?”
“Design what?”
“This ship. You didn't design it.”
“Oh no, not this ship. Stands to reason. I would have done a much better job if I'd designed it. No doubt. Those soldiers wouldn't have needed to jog or run or walk or whatever is was they were doing.”
“So dangerous,” said Estragon. “Imagine all the crew downtime with all the injuries. Just imagine!”
The corridor shook with a jolt and the sound of crumbling beyond the walls.
“It's short term thinking, that's what it is. You know what they did? They had to add an extension to the port wing. An extension! All the new civilisations we're picking up and they didn't think they'd need a place for them to stay.” He hissed out his nose before wincing in pain at a cut on his finger.
“Why do they do that, then? No planning ahead?”
“They just get younger every year, brother. Youth breeds ignorance, if nothing else.” But he was focussed on his finger more than the words out his mouth.
“What'd ya do there?”
“Just a cut,” said Vladimir. “Only just noticed it.”
“When did you do it?”
“Only just noticed it, like I said. And why is it that I did it? Wasn't it done to me?
“Hm?” said Estragon. “We're all purveyors of our own future. It all has to start somewhere. Stands to reason.”
“Why can't it just happen?” said Vladimir. “Like in those old dice games, you know the ones. Why can't it be like that? A quick throw, let go, see where the cookie crumbles.”
“What dice games?”
“Oh, you know the ones. What's-it and who's-it. The names aren't important.”
“If names aren't important, I've got a few I can call you. Names aren't important, he says!”
Vladimir sucked on his cut finger. “They aren't. If this was called a komboobally instead of a finger it wouldn't matter a smidgen.”
Is it?”
“It is what?”
“Called a komboobally. Is that what they call it?”
“What who calls it?”
“I don't know, one of the other species. There are many, you know. They each have their own language. That's something they aren't interested in sharing. At least not at first.”
“It's not what anyone calls it. I just made it up.”
A komboobally, you say? Not bad, not bad. Bit long. Way too long. But not bad. Gives a better feel for the joints, for all the bits that move and bend. Far better than finger.”
Psh,” said Vladimir. “Now you're just playing the devil's.”
Not infected, is it?” said Estragon with an upturned nose.
“I only just did it.”
Estragon noticed a chink and went for it, saying, “Ah-”
“I mean, it was only just done to me. Before you start again.”
“You're not one of the important ones, you see; not important without a gun. So it's not worth it for them to help you. They can ignore your arthritic legs and tennis elbow and your cut and your Alzheimers.”
“Alzheimers?” said Vladimir. “Who's got Alzheimers?”
“Never mind.”
“No, what do you mean Alzheimers?”
“Ah, you've forgotten. Never mind, never mind.”
“They think we're just cogs in a wheel,” said Vladimir.
“Who does?”
“They think anyone can come in and clean this place just as well.”
“Who thinks that?”
“They do, they! Now who's the one with Alzheimers?”
“You know, you should get it checked out,” said Estragon. “The finger, I mean. Not the Alzheimers.”
“No,” dismissed Vladimir, rubbing any excess blood on the torn shreds of cloth he wore.
“You should. Really. They have to write it down, put it in a report. Shows how dangerous the job is. We might even get danger pay.”
An ostentation of pilots, with red pin stripes and gelled blonde hair, crashed through Vladimir and fled away down the corridor, woollen hoods bouncing against their backs.
No, you need a nice uniform for that,” said Vladimir, looking past the stained beige blanket his colleague wore. He slowly lowered his head and went back to sweeping.
After a moment Estragon clutched his grumbling stomach. “Been a long shift,” he said after noticing Vladimir's accusatory stare.
Have you tried the Xinghoola?”
Are you still talking about your finger?”
No, not the komboob-something, the Xinghoola.”
So it's food, then? Nice, is it?”
“Sure it's nice. I wouldn't bring it up if it wasn't nice. They only have it in the mess upstairs.”
Ugh. Too far to travel,” said Estragon, out of breath. “Too far. A pity. What does it taste like?”
Vladimir put on his thinking man's pose, resting his chin on his hand on his broom pole. He twisted his head one way, then another. Finally he opened his mouth and answered, “Chicken.”
As if laughing from an incredibly funny joke the corridor shook with a larger jolt, dislodging debris from the rafters. A single soldier, racing toward them, slowed to keep his balance.
Heyo!” said Estragon. “My friend! I haven't seen you in such a long time.”
The man, for that is what he clearly was despite the vulgar attire, exhibited a shocked expression, which slowly straightened as realisation dawned. “Estragon,” he said, hesitating. “Nice to see you.” The corridor and his own uniform seemed to attract his attention more than the large old cleaner.
Yes, yes, good to see you up and about,” said Estragon. He nodded toward the insignia on the man's shoulder and added, “You've had improvements, I see. Pushed up. You've been pushed up.”
In response to the man's confused stare, Estragon added, “They've bumped you up to Chief Petty Officer now.”
“Uh, yeah. Look, I gotta-”
Nice, nice,” said Estragon. “Chief Petty Officer Pozzo. Has a nice ring to it. Your mum must be proud, I'm sure.”
She is, yeah,” said Pozzo.
“How is she, your old mum?”
“Good. Good, yeah. Look, I really have to-”
Ah, good,” said Estragon. He grabbed Pozzo by the arm and said, “Before you go – always in a hurry, I know – before you go, what's going on around here?
“What's going on where?” said Pozzo.
The lights momentarily dimmed as the corridor shook violently with great comic timing.
“That,” said Vladimir, joining in.
“Oh,” said Pozzo. “Yeah, apparently Captain Nichols played a game of cards with the Nulu's. They accused him of cheating and now we're in an all-out war.”
“Not very lucky, then, this Captain Nichols?” said Estragon.
“So it's not our own long-haired lot practising?” said Vladimir. “It's a proper war going on out there?”
Pozzo's eyes widened as he said, “Yeah, it's a proper damn war. I've gotta go.”
“Make sure to say hi to your mum for me!” said Estragon to the shrinking figure.
“Another war, hey?” said Vladimir.
“Another one,” said Estragon. “When was the last, do you think?”
“Not long. Not long ago. It never is. They don't need much of an excuse to drag out the weapons. Then they can trot out the same lines, always about peace and-”
“They! They! There he goes talking about they's again. Who are these they's?”
“It's them, obviously,” said Vladimir. “I mean clearly. If it's not them, then who is it exactly?”
“Them who?” said Estragon.
“Oh, I forget exactly who. But you know who they are. Everyone does.”
“And they want peace, do they?”
“Not peace as such, no. They want to always be striving for peace, yes, definitely always striving. That's what they aim for. That's their goal. To always be striving for peace.”
“But they don't actually want peace?” said Estragon.
“Oh no, what would be the point in that? How can you keep striving for peace when you've already got it? Stands to reason.”
The lights dimmed again, this time to be replaced with a dim red. The P.A. crackled in anticipation as a monotone female voice said, “Red alert. Red alert. All essential personnel to positions immediately. Red alert.”
All essential personnel. Essential, is that how it is?” said Vladimir.
We're all essential, brother,” said Vladimir. “That's what they don't get. The ones who make decisions. The ones who roll the dice. You need everyone for a ship to run smoothly. Everyone. Especially out here in deep space.”
Oh, if only. If only they knew that. The ones who make decisions. If only they knew that you need everyone. I see your point now, yes. Not thinking, that's their trouble. Not thinking at all.
Not caring,” said Vladimir. “It's the apathy that spreads itself out like tentacles. Like the tentacles of an octopus. Out to everyone.”
The P.A. continued to blurt out the same instructions, saying “Red alert. All essential personnel to positions.” It then added something new: “Please stand by for an important announcement.”
“Here we go,” said Vladimir, already looking up at the tiny monitor poking out from the wall.
An announcement, did it say?” said Estragon. “What'd'ya think it'll be?”
It'll be about fighting for peace, no doubt,” said Vladimir with a sigh. “Always striving. That's our goal: to strive.”
The scrolling Red Alert text on the monitor was replaced with the head of a clean-cut, sharp haired figure.
Who's that?” said Vladimir, to a shrugging Estragon.
“All Personnel,” said the figure, “All personnel.”
“Did he just say all personnel?” said Vladimir. “That's us!”
“Your attention please. Your attention please.”
“Hm?” said Estragon, leaning his ear closer to the monitor.
We've, uh, got ourselves embroiled in a bit of a conflic-” said the figure, quickly drowned out by an explosion and a large beam dropping between Vladimir and Estragon.
“Bit of a conflict?” said Estragon.
“But we need to pull together. All for one and one for all.”
“D'ya think that's the captain?” said Vladimir.
“One of the bigwigs,” said Estragon. “Definitely one of the bigwigs. Doesn't really matter which.”
The figure continued, saying, “It's at times like these I like to think about Earth and how important our mission is, out here in deep space. Just the other day I-” Distracted by whispering off screen, the figure shared his attention in quick flutters.
“You need to speak up!” yelled Estragon.
“I, uh...” said the figure, along with “well...” and “we need to strive for...” before the monitor went dead.
“Inspiring,” said Vladimir.
Rousing,” added Estragon. “Just the tonic we need, oh yes.” He went back to mopping the floor under his feet. “Oh, look at the boot marks. They certainly aren't mine! What do they walk on?”
Vladimir peeked over Estragon's bulky frame, saying, “You'll never get that out. Not in a million years.
Ah well,” said Estragon, tightening his bulbous jaw. “Too bad. They'll have to put up with it.” He said the last part with a wink to his colleague.
“Yes, exactly, if they want it clean they can do it themselves. Stands to reason.”
Distant screams and sounds of gunfire interrupted, followed by a shrill whistle and the synthesised voice of the P.A. saying, “Sections C and D, make your way to escape pods in orange chamber. Sections C and D, make your way...”
“Well that escalated quickly, did it not?” said Estragon.
“If it means I can skip my shift, I'm happy to go along with their little plan,” said Vladimir with a yawn.
“We won't even get a spot on those things, you know. I've seen this before. Back on the last ship. They'll put women and children first. Then all those essential personnel who couldn't even repel a wave of...what were they called?”
“I forget. Something with a U in it, I think. Or a Z. But if I can take a seat while we wait-” Vladimir stretched his stiff back “-they can call themselves whatever they want. We could be waiting for a long time, brother - all day I imagine - by the time they sort themselves out.”
“Yes, looks like we'll be waiting a while yet.”



© 2014 Ben Safta

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Conversion Therapy

“I myself was once a Tall. Now I'm an ex-Tall. I work for a place which helps people like yourself to learn to understand the reasons behind Tall tendencies. And how to heal them.”
That was Rick, on my first day here at Looking Up.
My parents had, earlier that day, told me to pack my things because I was going to a place that could help me. I wasn't sure what they meant. The car ride was long and hurt my gangly legs. When I complained, I saw the reflection of my father's eyes glaring at me, and my mothers consoling hand on his knee.
We all met with Rick, and his wife, who ran the ministry together.
“Mrs Tiller, I believe what you and your husband have created is a miraculous thing,” said my father.
“We believe so, too,” said Grace, as I know her now, offering another tea.
The room was quaint, old-fashioned, with the kind of wallpaper my grandmother might use. But they were much cleaner than my grandmother, with everything, including doilies, in their place.
It didn't take long for my parents to say goodbye and for my sparse lodging room to be shown to me. Rick explained that the low ceilings and short bed were just one component of the syllabus offered. In the cupboard I discovered a pair of pants and a top. After I put them on Rick asked me to look in the mirror.
“There's a common misunderstanding that vertical stripes make you look taller.” He said the last word with a spit. “But recent studies have shown the exact opposite.”
My lack of response must have convinced him to head down a tangent, by saying, “Oh yes, we keep up-to-date on the latest scientific literature. Unlike others who think that their gut instinct is enough. You see, we deal in evidence-based approaches to your problem.”
Again, I had nothing to add, and stood stone-faced. I was a bit angry that he accused me of having a problem.
After bunching up my top so that my shoulders appeared larger, he looked into my reflection and said, “What do you see?”
I wasn't sure. I just saw me. But that wasn't the right answer, as I found out, and so it was a ritual we would repeat every morning.
After breakfast I met up with others undergoing the conversion. In the room were three teenagers around my own age and an older man. One of the teenagers was female, which shocked me, since I'd never seen a tall girl before. We were lined up in order from perceived tallest to perceived shortest. That was the first lesson: there are no tall and short people. The effects of a sinful modern society dictate how we see the world. None of it is hereditary, since it's simply a case of upbringing. I started to wonder if my parents had played a part in what I had become.
The older man in the room, Kwame, was by far the (perceived) tallest. But he would often drop to his knees at the slightest provocation, which he said not only affected our perceptions of him but his own perceptions of us. Rick, who was taking the group, seemed to hold Kwame up as an example of where we should aim to be. He had, at that point, been here almost four months. I wasn't sure I could be on my own for that long.
We ended the group session with a prayer, for God to fix our spurious perceptions and grant us the strength to keep moving in the right direction.
We skipped lunch since, according to scientific studies, humans need only two meals a day to survive. The rest of the afternoon was spent alone performing visualisations. We were to sit somewhere we felt comfortable, anywhere within the high fences of the compound, and picture ourselves as tiny, so short that we'd have to look up at a cat. For some reason my imagination got the better of me and I saw myself as a rat, scampering away from swinging brooms while trying to scavenge for food scraps. Perhaps I was simply hungry.
That night was difficult. I didn't realise that I had anything wrong with me until they told me. Now I had a sense of what others must think of me, and the embarrassment made me shrink away. I was gradually pulled out of that by Grace, with calming words and a sweet smile. “Coming here was the first step in making positive changes to your life,” she said. “Soon you'll be looking up.”
The next week continued in much the same way. Because general chit-chat was discouraged, I didn't get to know the others that well. Yet there was still a connection with people who are afflicted in the same way as you, and that is what I felt for them: both camaraderie and pity.
Every day I was made to repeat Looking Up's core charter, which lays out the most important points we are here to learn:
  1. Attaining abstinence from tall behaviours.
  2. Lessening of tall temptations
  3. Strengthening a sense of short identity
  4. Correcting distorted styles of relating to other people and objects.
To cure the sin of point one we were told to not reach up to the high cupboard in the tea room. If we needed a plate or glass, we should find a safety step or a ladder and climb until the crockery was below our line of sight.
For the third sin, photos were taken of the entire group, Grace included, in front of a plain white wall. The photos would be processed and pinned to the community board. When looking at the picture, I was always shorter than Grace. It certainly made me feel like progress was being made.
The fourth sin was overcome by walking on our knees from morning till noon, becoming used to the perspective in relation to Rick and Grace, and also to the tables and chairs and beds and windows in the ministry.
Before curing the second sin, there were other activities to perform. I was asked to join the support group, where each of us was asked, in turn, how feeling tall had negatively affected our lives. One of the boys, Matt, spoke about the low clothes line in his back yard and how he'd often run into it playing cricket with his brother. Grace told us that in time he would not see the clothes line as being low, but as of being the correct height. The others all nodded in agreement. Then the girl, Pat, told about a trip she'd made overseas with her family and how it was difficult to fit within the tight confines of the seat. I thought back to my ride here and became instantly homesick.
It wasn't until I heard these stories that it really hit home just how difficult it is and what a daily struggle we go through. It is as if my eyes were opened. “You can't change what you don't acknowledge,” said Grace.
I was badgering her more each week about point two. I felt like this sin was being papered over. She only said that there will be a time to overcome the sin, but that I needed more preparation. I didn't fully trust her, which makes me feel silly now, and so wasn't as patient as I should have been.
After eight weeks I finally had my chance. Rick came to me, solemnly, and asked that I follow. He took me down a staircase I hadn't used before and through to a dark room with a large piece of fabric draped down one of the walls. In the centre of the room sat a strange looking chair, with wires coming out like hair, and a metal plate in front. He asked me to take a seat and connect the wires to my arms and legs with the small clips. They pinched at my skin but Rick said the pain would fade away shortly. The metal plate was just in front of my legs, making it extremely cramp.
Something popped up on the white screen – a movie. It was a comedy, I think, but I can't remember the name. Rick said sit back and enjoy the movie. I do remember laughing a few times. Then I must have relaxed and let my legs slide forwards because as soon as my feet touched the metal plate I received a jolt of pain. Rick said this was aversion therapy and that I would get zapped by electricity every time I succumbed to tall temptations, like stretching out.
It was very uncomfortable but I managed to keep from touching the plate until the next commercial (Rick must have recorded the movie from TV). The pain this time was much worse. Then I succumbed again, and again. It hurt, a lot, but I fought through the pain and tears so that my parents could be proud of me.
When we finished, Rick was nice enough to carry me to my bed to let me rest. I didn't even have to do anything the next day! He said I'll need more sessions, but I could rest for now. He also said he loved me.
I'm sure I'll be released soon as Grace thinks I'm doing very well and could be close to conversion. I don't feel tall at all, only on some days. Grace says I can write more in this journal from now on, but that I can't send my parents anything yet. Hopefully I can soon see them in person and, for the first time in five years, look up to them.



© 2014 Ben Safta

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.